a new lens on the work of governance & leadership...1. tele -surgeon: operate remotely with...
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A New Lens on theWork of Governance & Leadership
Agenda• A Changing Context for Leading & Governing Today• Modes for Complex Times: Generative
Governance/Distributed Leadership• Defining the Direction Forward• Using the NAIS Strategy Lab Model to Define Leverage Points• Building Leadership & Governance Pipelines for the Future
Goals
• Learn how to approach challenges/opportunities generatively• Learn how to focus on vision and develop strategy• Learn how to build board and leadership pipelines
A Changing Context
Interdependent Business Model
Limited LeversTo Pull
Ever-changingParent Needs andWants
Four Different Parental Jobs
Job 1Help me help my child overcome obstacles
Job 2Help me fulfill my
child’s potential in a values-aligned
community
Job 4Help me realize my plan for my talented
child
Job 3Help me develop a
well-rounded person who will impact the
world
New Approaches to Learning:From Student asPassenger toStudent as Driver
Workforce GettingTighter, YetYounger WorkersBecoming MoreMobil
Challenges &Opportunities throughEmergingTechnologies
1. Tele-surgeon: operate remotely with robotic tools instead of human hands.2. Re-wilder: famers who undo environmental damage to the countryside caused by people, factories, cars, etc.4. Simplicity expert: specialize in simplifying and streamlining business operations 6. Robot counselor: a resource for picking the right bot for a family, by observing how the family interacts and identifying their needs and lifestyle.7. Healthcare navigator: teach patients about the ins and outs of a complicated medical system.
Educating StudentsFor a Different World:Jobs Available in 2030
Growing StudentAnxiety
Educational Model
✓ Student as Driver✓ Move away from lectures✓ May not have “traditional”
teachers✓ Project-based learning✓ Very-focused✓ Fewer support structures
Business Model
✓ Lower tuition✓ No fundraising✓ Less physical plant✓ Centralized administration ✓ Leverage technology✓ For-profit investments✓ Network of schools
New School Models
Blurring Boundaries—Home Schooling, Bricks & Mortar, Community
A New Ecosystem of Learning & Working
Source: Knowledgeworks
Enter the Third Education Revolution• High school for all• College for all• Today—continuous learning
Emergence of the Sharing Economy
“Access is the New Ownership”
Partner ExerciseIdentify one or two key challenges your school is facing through the lenses of resource, management, output, and external challenges.
Challenges by TypeResource IssuesSchools must identify and acquire human, financial, material, technological, informational, and other resources. If these are not available in a timely fashion in appropriate quantities and qualities and at acceptable costs, operations will be disrupted.
Management IssuesResources must be managed in order to generate the programs and services for which your school exists. This involves such things as coordinating, supervising, communicating, monitoring, planning, developing procedures, assigning work, setting agendas, maintaining skills through professional development/training, and so on.
Output IssuesSchools exist to provide services to their students and communities, for example, educational programs, financial aid, college placement, community service programs, and so on. If these are not produced in sufficient quantity and quality, it may hurt your relationship with your board, parents, and students and the operations of your school.
External IssuesThere are numerous external forces (such as government bodies, the courts, suppliers, citizen groups, and general social, cultural, and economic conditions) over which your school has little or no control but which can greatly influence its operations.
Modes for Complex Times: Generative Governance& Distributed Leadership
The Three Levels of Governance
Attribute III II IBoard’s central purposes
Reconcile value propositions; Discern challenges; Think creatively;Make sense of circumstances
Scan environments; Review strategy; Monitor accountability
Oversee operations; Ensure accountability; Select and assess Head; Ratify policy
Fiduciary ModeStrategic ModeGenerative Mode
Copyright Governance Futures Project
Generative Governance leads the board to ask the questions that come before the fiduciary and strategic questions:
Have we framed this issue correctly?How else might we look at this?What else should we consider?
Generative thinking can lead to a reconsideration of how the current state may best be understood.Source: Chait, R., Ryan, W. & Taylor, B. (2005) Governance as Leadership: Reframing the Work of Nonprofit
Boards.
Questions to Spur Generative Thinking• What progress do our families want to make?• How would we approach this challenge if we were a
start-up?• What opportunities does the sharing economy offer?• What assets do we have that we are not leveraging?• What does the Third Education Revolution mean for our
school?• How could we extend our mission in a different format?
The Power of Questions: Catalytic QuestioningStep 1: Find a white board or flip chart where your team can do its question-centric work. Step 2: Pick a problem that your team cares about intellectually and emotionally.Step 3: As disruptive innovators, from Albert Einstein to Jack Dorsey, put it, “Question everything!” Engage in pure question talk, with one team member writing down each question verbatim.Step 4: Step back and decide which questions on your list seem most “catalytic,” or which ones hold the most potential for disrupting the status quo.Step 5: Get to work! Find some answers.
Structures & ProcessesThat Spur GenerativeThinking• Retreats over monthly meetings• Fewer committees• Task forces• Consent agenda model• Move away from bias towards action
Generative Processes can Move Boards from a Scarcity to an Opportunity Mindset
The danger in scarcity thinking is that we operate in a passive mode—reacting to events as they occur—as opposed to a proactive mode —responding thoughtfully and opportunistically to changing conditions.
We become skilled at advocating for resources, but not at creating them.
Group ExerciseTake a challenge Identifiedin the first exercise. Discuss throughCatalytic Questioning mode. Identifythe question most likely to bringa new lens to the challenge.
The Case for a New Approach to Leadership: Roles a Head Must Balance TodayVisionaryManagerResearcherInfluencerMotivatorRelationship builderEntrepreneur
Needed: A NewLeadership Ecosystem
Distributed Leadershipa collective social process emerging through the interactions of multiple actors rather than the attributes and behaviors of individual leaders.
Expanding the Notion of Leadership
Leadership that is distributed and dynamicIn a distributed leadership model, “Leadership no longer involves only a few people who hold formal positions steering the company. Rather, leadership is a social process occurring within a team, department, or organization that results in those collectives creating direction, alignment, and commitment for a shared goal.” “What Is the Nature of Leadership in Flat Organizations?
Recognition of leadership and influence irrespective of one’s role or positionDistributed leadership is leadership by expertise rather than leadership by role or years of experience. Genuine distributed leadership requires high levels of trust, transparency and mutual respect.”
“Distributed Leadership”
Bain Research on Distributed Leadership
Steps to Distributing Leadership1. Hierarchical leader lets go of control.2. Schools create a comprehensive blueprint for how to resource and use leadership to deliver on core mission.3. Schools invest in strengthening leadership capacity. Distributed leadership requires nurturing leadership potential and training emerging leaders to think differently about their work.4. Schools create teams with a shared mission. Institutional culture is a critical component of success.
The Difference between Working Groups and Teams
Mutual Accountability Essential
No group ever becomes a team unless it hold itself accountable as a team
• Moving from “the boss holds me accountable” to “we hold ourselves accountable”
• Developing an ingrained performance ethic that enables teams to form organically--“Being in the boat together”
• Underpinning themselves with two critical aspects of teaming--commitment and trust
• Energizing each other through the rich rewards of mutual achievement
Defining the Direction Forward
Common Vision
Where are we going?Why are we going there?
Cooperative Planning
How will we get there?
Mutual Evaluation
How will we know when we have arrived?
Open & Honest Communication/Respect
The Core of Successful Board/Head Relationships
What do we do best?What is our core business?What needs can we satisfy that others can’t?What kind of image do we want?How big do we want to be?What are our ethical and social responsibilities?What value do we want to have to our customers?What do we want to be in 5 years?
Where are we Going? Why are We Going There?Questions to Shape the Common Vision
Intended impact is a statement about what the organization is trying to achieve and will hold itself accountable for within some manageable period of time.
Theory of change (strategy) explains how the organization’s intended impact will actually happen, the cause-and-effect logic by which organizational and financial resources will be converted into the desired social results.
“Relatively few nonprofits have strategies. They have missions that define their reason for being and programs and services that contribute toward the fulfillment of their missions. But when resource-allocation decisions have to be made among these activities, determining those that will do the most good can be a difficult, often contentious task. The best approach is to develop strategy around “intended impact” and “theory of change.”
Source: Bridgespan Group
Mission is not Strategy
Strategy:What Levers Can wePull to Achieve that Vision?
Example:Vision: To become the first work-ready school in the region.
Intended Impact: Over the next three years, we will partner with business to create a program that prepares students for the world of work so they will be ready for a changing landscape.
The NAIS Strategy Lab
Model
To develop a theory of change, we first need to gather market insightsand then identify how we can leverage our capacities to emerge with a workable strategy.
What Are Our Market Realities
What Do Our Customers Want?
Understand Causation:The Jobs-To-Be-DoneMethodology
What Is a Job to Be Done?
• A Job to Be Done (JTBD) is the progress that a person is trying to make in a particular circumstance.
• It includes an understanding of the functional, emotional, and social characteristics of the desired outcome the consumer is trying to achieve.
This progress is defined by…
Context
Hiring/Firing Criteria
Struggling Moment
Forces of Progress
Desired Outcome
Trade-offs in Hiring Criteria
The context of the situation the consumer is in
The moment of struggle that leads a consumer to begin looking for a new solution
The causal mechanisms that move people to and hold them back from choosing a new solution to a struggling moment
The dimensions that tell consumers how well a product/service solves or doesn’t solve their problems
The metrics customers use to measure success when getting a job done
What consumers are willing and not willing to give up when hiring a new product/service
What is Noise?Those Factors We Can’t Control
What Leverage Points do We Have To Achieve our Intended Impact Within our Market Limitations?
What are thePerformance FactorsThat Will BringTogether YourMission and Market?
Think About Your Current Vision
Identify Those PerformanceFactors that Will Most Attract Parents to that Vision
Using CollaborationAs A Strategy
Leverage In-Demand Assets
Leverage Partnerships;Build a Network
Leverage Strengths through Repositioning
Leverage ValueThroughNew Pricing
Building Leadership & Governance
Pipelines
The People: Build a Board for Mission & Priorities• Select by leadership ability, not just role• Seek diversity in every way• Ensure representation of past, present,
and future• Include “outsiders” (critical mass)• Use committees and task forces as trials• Make time for social interactions to build
trust• Engage in succession planning
Trustees Who Understand and Support Mission will Lead with Those Values in Mind
Trustee EducationEssential:Trustees Who Understand Their Roles Perform Better
Source: BoardSource, Leading with Intent
Size of Board• Today, it is important that your board
remains nimble and flexible• If you are in transformation mode, it may
be better to have a small board so that you can act quickly
• Fewer committees can help in driving smaller boards
• Consider other ways of involving key voices: task forces, visiting boards, etc.
Succession Planning: Develop Deep Recruitment Pipelines
With a skills matrix looking several years out, schools can develop a deep list of potential candidates to choose from.
Source: The Bridgespan Group
Case Study: One School’s Journey
• School Situation• Changing market•More competition• No distinguishing value proposition• Declining enrollment• New head of school
CASE Study (cont.)
• Inefficiencies were diluting the work of the board and its committees—too much overlap between committees. • Discussions often were operational vs. strategic. • Multiple committees required extra
communication coordination that dominated the board meeting agenda. • The habit of this structure was ingrained and no
other way seemed possible…or even desirable.
Path to Change• Scheduled weekend retreat—lots of time for
reflection, brain-storming and discussion.• Examined results of board self-assessment to set a
baseline context for improvement.• What rose to the top:
• Lack of coordination between committees• Lack of time for strategy• Board members feeling that their skills were not
well used• Board members not feeling educated about the
context in which the school existed today.
Major Changes
• Board downsized into two super-committees:• “Engagement”--anything related to engaging
external constituents in the school’s activities • “Assets”--combined functions of Finance, Building &
Grounds, and Investment committees
• Only the Committee on Trustees and Executive Committee were maintained as discrete entities
Leadership Development Roadmap
Engage senior leadersThe chief executive signals the importance of leadership development, sets expectations for her team, and puts the process in motion by first developing the people who report directly to her and then asking them to do the same for their teams
Map out a vision of the future leadership teamOnly with an understanding of the future leadership capabilities required to achieve the organization’s strategy can senior leaders assess the potential of future leaders to meet emerging needs, and put in place the plans to develop required competencies in high-potential leadership candidates.
The Bridgespan Group, Nonprofit Leadership Development: What’s Your ‘Plan A’ for Growing Future Leaders? (2012)
Leadership Development Roadmap (cont.)Develop future leadersWhile many nonprofits offer their staff members ‘stretch’ opportunities, the most successful groups are systematic about doing so, consciously building the right skills in the right people over time.
Seek new talent to fill gapsHiring new leaders who fit your needs is just the first step. Making
sure that the first few months on the job are carefully planned so new leaders can succeed is crucial.
Monitor & improve the process of developing leadersSuccessful nonprofits gather data to ensure that they are doing what they set out to do, making progress toward their Plan A goals, and continuously adjusting their approaches to incorporate lessons they learn.
Eric Krell, “Weighing Internal vs. External Hires,” Society of Human Resource Management
Leadership Development: The Hiring Question
To hire externally or internally: Scenarios to consider
Look Outside Look Within
Organization Needs a strategy shift or corporate turnaround
Organization is thriving
Succession planning and performance evaluations
Absent or inconsistent Consistent and transparent
Needed skills Not found within the organization
Specialized knowledge of organization or industry required
Organizational culture Open to multiple perspectives Hard to understand or fit into
Processes In place to support job training and onboarding
Few in place to support training and integration
Nurturing and Developing Future LeadersThe 70-20-10 rule
“A research-based, time-tested guideline for developing managers says that you need to have three types of experience,
using a 70-20-10 ratio.”
70% challenging assignments
20% developmental relationships
10% coursework and training
Center for Creative Leadership, “The 70-20-10 Rule”
Nurturing and Developing Future Leaders
Learning by doing: One school’s example
At St. Andrew’s Episcopal School, academic department chairs serve three- to six-year terms. This allows the
head of school to distribute leadership experience, test out potential senior administrators, and encourage more teachers to see themselves as school leaders
without having to leave the classroom or the school. “Internal leadership development and institutional
commitment to professional growth create a positive school culture, and draw and keep the best educators.”
An openness in the hiring process and an institutional preference for internal advancement at St. Andrew’s means that individuals are truly encouraged to apply for new/open positions. This leads to ongoing conversations and opens lines of communication about individuals’ interests and ambitions.
Every creative act involvesa new innocence of
perceptionliberated from the
cataractof accepted belief.
-Arthur Koestler